Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent open-access publication
in Global Ecology and Conservation:

Riekkola, L., Sprogis, K. R., Della Penna, A., Andrews-Goff, V., Harcourt,
R., Cole, R., ... & Carroll, E. L. (2025). Large-scale differences,
mesoscale similarities: Neighbouring marine predator populations provide
insights into Southern Ocean productivity. *Global Ecology and Conservation*,
e03788. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2025.e03788


Abstract:
Understanding how marine predators explore dynamic ocean environments is
key for assessing the ecological significance of different habitats and for
informing conservation efforts. This is particularly critical in remote and
poorly surveyed regions, where marine predators can serve as ecosystem
sentinels and provide valuable biological and oceanographic data. Here, we
examined the foraging strategies of southern right whales (*Eubalaena
australis*, SRW) using a large-scale satellite tagging dataset from two
neighbouring populations: Aotearoa New Zealand and Western Australia. We
linked foraging behaviour, inferred from bio-logging data, with remotely
sensed environmental data to assess habitat use in relation to Southern
Ocean oceanographic features. At broad spatial scales, foraging areas were
identified near major frontal systems, but while the New Zealand population
primarily targeted the Subtropical Front, the Australian population visited
a wider range of oceanic features, including the Antarctic ice edge. At
finer scales, both populations co-located with mesoscale eddies,
preferentially foraging in cyclonic (cold-core) eddies. Satellite tracking
data also suggested that foraging SRWs may exhibit quasi-planktonic
behaviour by drifting around eddies. Differences in foraging strategies
between the New Zealand and Western Australian populations may have
important implications for their continued recovery under climate change.
Furthermore, this work showcases SRWs as a sentinel species that highlights
key foraging habitats that remain overlooked by high seas conservation
efforts.

Please feel free to contact us with any questions.

Thank you,
Leena Riekkola

-- 

-- Rutherford Postdoctoral Fellow

Te Kura Mātauranga Koiora | School of Biological Sciences

Waipapa Taumata Rau | University of Auckland

e: [email protected] | p: +64 (0)212922551 | t: @FinntasticLeena


-- Associate Editor, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the
United Kingdom
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